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Swap Bali for one of these seven Indonesian islands that haven’t been ruined

Lee Cobaj
08/09/2025 10:00:00

Bali has become a victim of its own popularity. Creaking infrastructure, clogged roads and over-development have travellers (never mind the detrimental impact to locals) lamenting the descent of the Island of the Gods into a hellish, overcrowded mess. But Indonesia is positively blessed with beautiful unspoilt isles waiting to be explored – more than 17,000 of them, in fact. There’s no shortage of places for adventurous travellers to roam, but I’ve narrowed my list down to seven of the most exciting islands that are also fairly easy to reach – and every one of them is stuffed with natural attractions and rich cultural experiences.

Sumba

When I’m asked where to find the world’s most beautiful beaches, my reply is always Sumba. Around 1,000 miles east of Jakarta and 600 miles north of Australia, Sumba is the result of a collision between tectonic plates, which has endowed the landscape with soaring bluffs, gigantic boulders, dramatic limestone formations, fearsome surf breaks, sheltered blue lagoons and glittering white sands.

The Sumbanese culture is just as fascinating, with a post-colonial mish-mash of Christianity and animism to discover. Take a cultural tour and you’ll encounter indigenous homes with elaborate thatched roofs, ancient monolithic tombs and impressive – sometimes bloody – festivals, as well as little wooden churches with spires in the shape of Jesus riding a horse.

How to do it

Original Travel (020 3582 4990; originaltravel.co.uk) has eight nights at Cap Karoso from £3,420, B&B, including flights, private transfers and some activities.

Flores

Part of the Lesser Sunda Islands, located to the east of Bali, Flores is best known as the gateway to Komodo, where the famed dragons have roamed for 1.4 million years. A visit to Komodo National Park shouldn’t be missed but Flores itself is so enchanting it’s worth a holiday in its own right.

Dozens of active but sleeping volcanoes crest across the landscape, including Kelimutu, known for its cauldron-like, colour-changing lakes. Rural villages, surrounded by terraced fields, have homes shaped like pyramids and cones, and celebrate colourful harvest festivals. Every beach is a Bounty-ad beauty and the marine life is some of the most biodiverse on the planet. It’s now easier than ever to get there, too, thanks to direct flights from Kuala Lumpur with AirAsia or from Singapore with Jetstar Asia.

How to do it

Regent Holidays (0117 453 7243; regent-holidays.co.uk) has an 10-night Discover Flores on Two Wheels tour (with vehicle backup support) from £4,345, including flights, accommodation, most meals and a two-night cruise around the islands of Komodo National Park.

Lombok

Until recently, the spellbinding beauty of Lombok had been largely overlooked in favour of neighbouring Bali, but the golden-white sands are slowly shifting. A significant investment in infrastructure has doubled capacity at the airport, drawing new direct international flights from Singapore and Kuala Lumpur, while a smooth new road network has made it easier than ever to get around. That said, the majority of the island remains blissfully undeveloped, leaving visitors free to soak up Lombok’s volcanic landscape, shimmering rice fields, near-empty beaches and rich Sasak culture at a leisurely pace.

How to do it

Turquoise Holidays (0207 147 7087, turquoiseholidays.co.uk) has seven nights staying in a Luxury Pavilion Garden View at the Oberoi Lombok from £1,816, B&B, including return flights with Singapore Airlines and private transfers.

Belitung

A Unesco Geopark you’ve likely never heard of, the island of Belitung sits in the warm Java Sea, east of Sumatra. Its winning attributes include beaches so white they’ll make your eyes water, gigantic granite boulders hewn into fantastical shapes by the elements, lagoons that shimmer from ice-blue to deep sapphire, and a bounty of biodiversity. Tourism remains in its infancy, but that doesn’t mean there’s nothing to do. Fuel up on Javanese coffee for island-hopping boat trips, snorkel above colourful coral reefs, kayak through mangroves and hike to eye-popping viewpoints. Evenings are for firepits on the beach, barbecued fish cakes and stargazing cruises.

How to do it

Bamboo Travel (020 7720 9285; bambootravel.co.uk) can tailor-make a seven-night stay at the Sheraton Belitung from £2,390, B&B, including flights with Malaysian Airlines via Jakarta, two nights at the Mandarin Oriental Jakarta, private transfers and some activities.

Bintan

A one-hour ferry ride from Singapore, Bintan’s wide, white-sand beaches, emerald golf courses, sweet coastal villages and nightly firefly displays make it a popular escape for Lion City-dwellers. You’ve got everything you need for a family-friendly break, but those in search of solitude need only head south. Passing through pineapple farms and rubber plantations, the island becomes quieter until you reach the golden nugget of land that houses adult-only Cempedak Island. Reached by speedboat, guests are greeted with three golden beaches, a collection of 20 curvaceous bamboo villas (all solar powered and naturally cooled) and a hyper-local restaurant (with a global wine cellar). Neighbours include hornbills, the occasional pangolin and a family of slippery sea otters.

How to do it

Luxtripper (020 3023 7732; luxtripper.co.uk) has a seven-night Simple Luxury package from £2,299, including two nights’ B&B at the Pan-Pacific Singapore, five nights’ full-board at Cempedak Island, flights and transfers.

Anambas Archipelago

Set in the remote Natuna Sea, east of Malaysia and west of Indonesia, this island chain has a feeling of magic in the air. Of its 255 far-flung islands, only 26 are inhabited, including Bawah Reserve – the region’s only luxury resort. It’s reached by taking the ferry from Singapore to Batam island, where guests are then whisked 80 minutes away by amphibious aircraft to what feels like the edge of the Earth. Amid a 1,000-hectare marine conservation area, six rainforest-rich islands rise out of the water ringed by turquoise lagoons teeming with tropical fish. Three hiking trails on the main isle lead to secret beaches, shape-shifting sandbars, permaculture gardens and an extremely rare, 500-year-old keruing tree. Aquatic activities include scuba diving, snorkelling, kayaking and sunset cruises.

How to do it

The Ultimate Travel Company (0203 993 205, theultimatetravelcompany.co.uk) has two nights at the Fullerton Bay Hotel in Singapore, B&B, and five nights at Bawah Reserve, full-board, from £6,250, including return economy flights with Singapore Airlines and seaplane transfers.

Raja Ampat

Not one but 1,500 pom-pom-like islands embroider the coast of Papua, the world’s second-largest island and one of the most biodiverse points on the planet (nine new species of snail, seven new species of lobster and four new species of tree snake have been discovered there in the last two years alone).

Set at the heart of the Coral Triangle, hard-core divers have known about this spectacular part of the world for decades but it’s only fairly recently that more luxurious leisure vessels have started making inroads to Raja Ampat. Cruises typically range from seven to 12 nights, allowing enough time for spotting birds of paradise in crystalline lagoons at sunrise, gentle hikes through prehistoric rainforest to the sacred Blue River, photo ops at the Piaynemo viewpoint overlooking a fairytale assembly of rounded limestone islands, heart-racing searches for pods of Bryde’s whales and daily lolls on empty beaches.

How to do it

Rascal Voyages has a Conservation Voyage in partnership with The SEA People in Raja Ampat, starting from £9,000 per person based on two sharing, including five nights on board, all meals, soft drinks, international flights and transfers. Available through Experience Travel Group (020 7924 7133; experiencetravelgroup.com).

by The Telegraph